logo
Funeral details announced for former loyalist terror leader Andy Tyrie

Funeral details announced for former loyalist terror leader Andy Tyrie

Sunday World21-05-2025
Andy Tyrie was one of the most prominent figures from the early years of the UDA
The funeral of a former loyalist paramilitary leader will take place in Dundonald tomorrow morning following his death at the weekend.
Andy Tyrie, who was 85, was one of the most prominent figures from the early years of the UDA.
He led the terror group from 1973 until 1988, when an attempt on his life led to him quitting.
Tyrie stepped away from politics and the public spotlight some time ago.
His tinted glasses and thick moustache made him a recognisable figure during the 1970s and 1980s.
It is understood Tyrie had been ill for some time.
A funeral notice confirmed his funeral will take place in Dundonald Presbyterian Church at 11am tomorrow.
The notice added he 'passed away peacefully after a long illness surrounded by his loving family'.
"Cherished Husband of Agnes and much loved Dad of Dorothy (Cole), Andrew (Ann) and Linda (John),' it added.
'A very special Granda and Great Granda.
"At home with the Lord.'
Following the announcement of his death at the weekend, tributes were paid to Tyrie.
Andy Tyrie
Peter Osborne, who chaired the Community Relations Council, posted on X: 'In the years that I knew him Andy Tyrie was an advocate for tolerance, reconciliation, and on those issues that particularly affect working class communities. Sorry to see this. Condolences to his family.'
His name had featured on a loyalist museum in east Belfast.
The Loyalist Conflict Museum opened its doors in 2012, and was originally called The Andy Tyrie Interpretive Centre.
Tyrie's first involvement in loyalist paramilitary activity came with the UVF in the late 1960s, before he switched to the UDA.
Soon Tyrie became a UDA officer in the Shankill Road area, and was appointed leader in 1973 after the murder of Tommy Herron.
Although not convicted of any paramilitary activity, under his leadership the UDA was widely involved in terrorism.
According to the Sutton database of deaths at Ulster University's Cain project, the UDA/UFF was responsible for 260 killings during the Troubles. Most (208) of its victims were civilians, predominantly Catholics.
However, Tyrie encouraged the organisation to embrace politics through the establishment of the New Ulster Political Research Group (NUPRG).
He was involved in organising the Ulster Workers' Council strike, which brought down the old power-sharing government.
In March 1988, Tyrie narrowly avoided death from a car bomb. No-one admitted responsibility for the failed attack, but Tyrie believed it was carried out by potential successors within the UDA.
He quit as leader days later and went on to sever all links with the organisation.
Tyrie backed the Ulster Democratic Party's campaign in favour of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Poetry of the margins: Nick Burbridge's Undercover Verses
Poetry of the margins: Nick Burbridge's Undercover Verses

Irish Post

timea day ago

  • Irish Post

Poetry of the margins: Nick Burbridge's Undercover Verses

NICK Burbridge's Undercover Work, his fourth collection, comprises a series of poems that explore various themes this poet, songwriter, novelist, and playwright has written about elsewhere. Burbridge is the laureate of those working in the margins: undercover officers, mad poets, those blighted by the indifference of society, and in poems both in form and in free verse Burbridge maps out his territory. The undercover officers arrive early: 'Out of Ashford Barracks in an unmarked van the new squad/of undercover men…/pilgrim to Canterbury for a last dry run.' They're headed for the six counties and in poems with titles such as Tour of Duty, The Whisteblower's Waltz, and Dirty Peace Burbridge seeks to inhabit the minds of those sent in to police the North when the Troubles first broke with the burning of the Bogside. Towards the end of this sequence scattered throughout Undercover Work we arrive at Burbridge's own view of recent history: 'Civil wars are lost when they begin.' If, as Coventry Patmore said, the end of art is peace, it is largely thanks to poets like Burbridge that the peace process found a precise articulation and succeeded after so many years of the Troubles. But what about the legacy of the mindless violence that was perpetrated in the cause of nationalism? Even here on the 'mainland' the psychological effects of 'civil war' can be felt. Burbridge creates an alter ego, Dublin Flynn, who weaves in an out of the collection, a man shaken to his core by 'civil war'. He makes his first appearance in Brighton Rock (Flynn on Patrol), that martial word, 'patrol', linking Flynn to the 'undercover officers': 'Flynn glanced up at the star-strewn sky, distracted/by the subtle motion of the seasons, and a sense of what is past and yet to come.' He's attacked in his local park by a 'gang of addicts', and ends as 'minor tragedy./One more exhibit on the fringe'. Flynn's various skirmishes are at once funny and sad, but Flynn is at heart a comic character, a restless frequenter of bars and sessions, a survivor where all around him is falling apart. It is his optimism of the heart that keeps him going. The lyricism of 'star-strewn sky' shows what Burbridge is capable of, and elsewhere in the collection a similar lyricism is at work: Among sown fields I walk alone waiting for news. This is my pitch. I am your grandfather; I'll watch over the paths you are set on but your map's not my concern. (Celtic Knot) In The Maze, Burbridge brings together this hard-won lyricism with his political concerns to fine effect: So I watched his neck bend and his limbs racked and torn. Somewhere a bell was rung. This note I send to to the dead and unborn. One day we will all be sprung. Burbridge can do everything as a poet, from political and personal lyric poetry to elegy. His poem for Dubliner Gabriel Duffy (1942–2008), author of the autobiography From Sham To Rack is very moving: 'when these footholds I have fought to keep/dissolve… and I'm washed up on the black strand/where all drifters end, let me find you…' (From Sham To Rock). At the heart of the collection is Nursery As Ashram. For some years, besides his work in the arts, Burbridge has worked in a nursery in Brighton, and Nursery As Ashram conveys in vivid images some sense of what this work has been like: 'Seasons unfold, and the shrill flock/beat a worn trail to the nearby park/as they have for decades, as they will.' Burbridge's focus on children here, after the darker poems of troubled operatives and operators, is both touching and affecting. One wonders if Burbridge might write a children's book next, a collection to rank alongside Lear and Causley and Rosen. With the great gifts Burbridge has at his disposal it wouldn't surprise me. Undercover Work, Nick Burbridge, Olympia Publishers, £11.99 See More: Nick Burbridge, Poetry, Undercover Work

Surviving Miami Showband members remember their bandmates on 50th anniversary of atrocity
Surviving Miami Showband members remember their bandmates on 50th anniversary of atrocity

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

Surviving Miami Showband members remember their bandmates on 50th anniversary of atrocity

Surviving members of the Miami Showband travelled north and south of the Border on Thursday, commemorating their former bandmates who paid the 'ultimate price' during the Troubles. Thursday marked 50 years since lead singer Fran O'Toole, guitarist Tony Geraghty and trumpeter Brian McCoy were murdered by loyalist paramilitaries on July 31, 1975, after the band was stopped at a bogus checkpoint outside Newry, Co Down. [ Miami Showband massacre 50 years on: 'The trauma lasts for ever' – Stephen Travers ] The fake army patrol attempted to hide a bomb on the band's tour bus before the device exploded prematurely, killing two of the would-be bombers. Their accomplices then opened fire on the band. On Thursday, beginning at the site of the attack on Buskhill Road, Ray Miller, Des Lee, Stephen Travers and their former road manager Brian Maguire then travelled to Newry, Dundalk and finally Dublin on Thursday. READ MORE Speaking at the site of the Miami Showband memorial on Parnell Square, Dublin, Mr Maguire (76) said: 'It never leaves you. 'Today has probably been the hardest day I've had in 50 years.' Miami Showband's Tony Geraghty, Fran O'Toole, Ray Millar, Des McAlea, Brain McCory and Stephen Travers. Photograph courtesy of Stephen Travers He said that on the night he had left the venue before the band, which was a rare occurrence. 'If I had been 20 seconds behind the boys, I'd have been stopped and shot as well. It never goes out of your memory. It's always a part of you,' he said. About 80 people congregated at the memorial on Parnell Square and heard how the band members sought to bring enjoyment to those north and south of the Border, but ended up paying the 'ultimate price'. Mr Travers said that for any victims of the Troubles '50 years is only like 50 seconds, because it's ever-present'. His abiding memory of that day, he said, was the 'cursing and anger' among those who had carried out the attack 'because it had all gone wrong for them'. He recalled rolling over on his back after the attack and staring at the moon after the men had left. 'Eventually, I started to crawl around through the bodies of my friends, and body parts of the unfortunate men who blew themselves up,' he said. Noting he had spent Thursday 'talking about the slaughter of three musicians', Mr Travers said: 'Every time I turn on the television at night time I see the slaughter of 60,000 people in Gaza. The genocide must stop. How can we possibly lament three musicians and our lost lives and not be just as vocal in lamenting theirs.' Mr Travers said the futility of violence and the failure of violence were 'something politicians should get their head around'. He said he was proud to have been a member of the band, saying: 'I ask myself why are we commemorating the Miami Showband. And the reason I came up with is because it's now much more than a band. 'Every single man and woman that ever stood on a stage north of the Border during those terrible times was a hero, every one of them, because they brought people together. 'And that's the legacy of the Miami Showband: wherever we played, people flocked together, whether they were Catholic, Protestant, unionist, nationalist, they came together. 'Sectarianism was left outside the door and people came into the ballrooms and saw each other as human beings and danced with each other. Sometimes, they fell in love.'

Surviving member of Miami Showband massacre tells of guilt ahead of book launch
Surviving member of Miami Showband massacre tells of guilt ahead of book launch

Irish Daily Mirror

time5 days ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Surviving member of Miami Showband massacre tells of guilt ahead of book launch

A surviving member of The Miami Showband massacre has said it took him five years to write a book on the heinous crime – saying he battled with survivor's guilt for many years after the attack. Des Lee and Stephen Travers were the only two members of the hit band who survived the horrific slaughter by members of a UVF loyalist paramilitary group on July 31, 1975. Singer Fran O'Toole, 29, 23-year-old Tony Geraghty and 23-year-old Brian McCoy were killed in the attack after the band were travelling back home to Dublin from a gig in the North. It later emerged that the bogus British army checkpoint outside Newry was made up of UDR soldiers and members of terrorist group, the UVF. Des has now launched his first book - My Saxophone Saved My Life: The Miami Showband Massacre and My Quest for Answers – where he details the night of the attack and who he believes is responsible for it. He told The Irish Mirror: "To be honest, it took about five years (to write it). It was hard to work on it. Every time I picked it up, it made me cry and I put it down because it was depressing. "But I realise, 'listen, you're coming up to a ripe old age and you didn't want to kick the bucket when the book is not finished'." Mr Lee added: "I don't want people to think the book is depressing. The book is all about my life from when I was a young boy from Belfast and how we were treated as Catholics, back in the 50s. We got third class housing, third class education, third class jobs. "We were kicked into the ground. When you were a Catholic, you were just a piece of rubbish. I speak about that. "But there's a lot of comedy and humour in it, there's a lot of tear jerks. I think anyone who buys the book will have a wonderful read. "But I want people to know that the guy who organised the Miami massacre was the top guy in the British army. A guy called Captain Robert Nairac. He was the man who organised the weaponry, the uniforms, the bomb, the vehicles. Absolutely everything. "I want people to know all about this man, this man was evil and the British government to this day denies he was there on the night, but we have proof that he was there." The Miami Showband Mr Lee said that the night of the Miami Showband massacre will never leave him. "It never will till the day I die. I wake up every morning – there's photographs of Fran O'Toole in my bedroom, there's photographs of the guys from the band in my lounge, so I live with this 24 hours a day, 365 days of the year and I wouldn't have it any other way. "They were my three brothers; they will always be remembered. I want to keep their names alive. They were purely musicians." He added that he suffered with survivor's guilt for many years after the attack. "I felt sorry for the O'Toole, the Geraghty's and the McCoy family. "We were targeted because we were the number one band in Ireland, and they wanted maximum publicity. They put the bomb in the van, tell us to get back in the van, head up to Dublin, the bomb explodes, we're all killed, there's no one to say any different. "We would be accused of carrying weapons for the IRA. Then there would've been difficulties between the Irish Government and the English Government. That is exactly what would've happened," he added. My Saxophone Saved My Life: The Miami Showband Massacre and My Quest for Answers is available to buy now. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store